Monday, January 26, 2009

The Crucifixion of the 3rd Deepak Chopra

People who do not understand the lesson of the Bible are apparent, but humility, love (for Mr. Chopra) and compassion for humanity allows me, only this once, to do my job publicly (I'm a secret chaplain).

First, we have a tradition on earth of not reinventing the wheel, thus if the bible contains a truth, we ought to keep it relevant. It does.

The bible, Brother Chopra, speaks to what we have come to learn as a civilization about the nature of our species--a beast not too far removed from the rest of the animal kingdom. Need you be aware, I have fans in the animal kingdom what ask for my autograph regulary--squirrels, hawks, sparrows, turtles, dogs, etc. These animals are a representation of the natural system of the earthen spirit. But this is not quite "secular spirituality" Brother Chopra. I explain. A study of the beast and its image--take a dog for example--demonstrates that we are, in fact, disembodied entities give license by radiation from the sun, reacting with earthen material to give us a sense of presence and displacement within the auspices of the planet. The spirit within us has access to twin geneses. The first is the spirit of Satan, the inate selfishness of man driven by access to sugar, often manifest when other human accountability is lacking. This is to say, because of sugar, man will do what is necessary for personal satisfaction without a single thought about others. The other genesis is the spirit of God, often touted as the seven spirits of God throughout the earth: These aggregate into selflessness, so that in satisfying our wants and needs we account for others. These two spirits determine human history and have done so since ancient egypt, when Osiris, the first Jesus, was mutilated horribly before being ressurrected. It was then, as now, just another adult coming to realize what I, because of my value, have: Man is wicked.

So, Chopra, the Bible insists that this sugar problem makes it statistically impossible for mankind to progress, since mankind is not trained or taught by nature, by current nature, to appreciate that selflessness is the key to fulfilling individual wants. If we act selflessly, the rewards promote human endeavour, while selfish behavior does nothing but regresses us to the animal kingdom. This need, for training to realize selflessness--that which makes us human--is called the necessity of salvation. Salvation, then, being "the way" of selflessness as a reflection of God, Dominus Solus, the "I" who ultimately feels every pain and every joy, the "I" residing, for now, on the earth. So the bible is a compendium based on these two principles, selflessness as a reflection of God, and selfishness as the work of Satan. With these core concepts, you can't go wrong in interpreting or speaking about the bible, whatever faith you posess. It is what I saw wrong in your analysis, for the bible is not about Christianity--it is in fact a secular generational history written by generations of the Secret Service, inspired by the popular story of history, but hidden by scribes and well wishers knowing, as Alexandria shows, that man is wicked enough to destroy evidence of his wickedness.
Mr. Chopra, one must take a stand based upon the bible, to be selfless and not selfish, and that's all we ask. In doing so, however, one will find the bible to be a fascinating compendium of ageless wisdom on the nature of man and how he falls into these categories.
The story of the Christ is a narrative, a synoptic tale, then that is the fruit of man's learning about man's own natural philosophy on energy expenditure, and the Revelation of the Christ, then, is current proof that we know the nature of man, and soon thereafter could predict his future and the eternal narrative sourced from the mystery of selfishness that is granted the beast and its image, and the light of selflessness that we feel, in our emotional sense, when God is with us. Emanoel.
So, Chopra, I'm not a fan of new-ageism and ultimate interpretations of the bible that do not render unto the scribes their due. Biblical philosophy is precise and stunning, the more you study it, and there is litle appetite for the secular once one has come to know the God of the bible. The Jehovah's witnesses call him Jehovah. In my culture, he is a God and King, Olodumare.

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